Camel Rock & Roll Dance Party
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- Alan Freed, Count Basie, Joe Williams, Sunny Gale, The Rover Boys, The Chordettes, Tony Bennett, Frankie Lymon & The Teenagers, LaVerne Baker, Faye Adams, The Robins, The Jacks, The Nilsson Twins, The Flairs, The Treniers, Al Sears, Dorrie Ann Grey, The Penguins, Etta James, The Clovers, The Cadillacs, Clyde McPhatter, Della Reese, Sugar & Spice, The Platters, The Drifters, The Moonglows, The Valentines, Chuck Willis, Ivory Joe Hunter, The Five Keys, Gloria Mann, The Three Chuckles, Gene Vincent & His Blue Caps, Johnny Burnette Trio, Otis Williams & The Charms, The Cleftones, The Four Fellows, Chuck Berry, Flamingos, Big Maybelle, Jimmy Cavallo & The House Rockers, Bill Haley & His Comets, Mabel King
These broadcasts are among the last regularly-scheduled live performances of popular music on radio. Featuring Count Basie & his orchestra in the earlier broadcasts. Later broadcasts featured Sam "The Man" Taylor & his orchestra with Big Al Sears. Sponsored by Camel cigarettes.
April 7, 1956 - Was the first ever regularly scheduled network rock 'n' roll broadcast - Rock 'N' Roll Dance Party - with Alan Freed premiered on CBS Radio.
April 7, 1956 - Was the first ever regularly scheduled network rock 'n' roll broadcast - Rock 'N' Roll Dance Party - with Alan Freed premiered on CBS Radio.
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- 2015-10-11 05:19:16.932856
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- 2019-03-30T06:21:12Z
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- CamelRockRollDanceParty
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Reviews
Reviewer:
Alan Freed
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favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
April 10, 2018
Subject: Alan Freed Show
Subject: Alan Freed Show
What more can you say?.....an outstanding show in great quality, over the years, you only heard 5 mins of heavy reverb, false stereo, and edited. great to hear them complete!...
Reviewer:
lionjill1980
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favoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
October 3, 2017
Subject: Incorrect label
Subject: Incorrect label
The audio file labeled as August 11, 1956 is actually August 25 1956:
The Camel Rock and Roll Dance Party. August 25, 1956. Program #23. CBS net origination, AFRTS rebroadcast. New York origination. AFRTS program name: "Rock and Roll Dance Party." Alan Freed (host), Bill Haley and The Comets, Dick Noel (announcer), Mabel King, Sam The Man Taylor and His Orchestra, Bern Bennett (announcer).
The Camel Rock and Roll Dance Party. August 25, 1956. Program #23. CBS net origination, AFRTS rebroadcast. New York origination. AFRTS program name: "Rock and Roll Dance Party." Alan Freed (host), Bill Haley and The Comets, Dick Noel (announcer), Mabel King, Sam The Man Taylor and His Orchestra, Bern Bennett (announcer).
Reviewer:
Argyle D'Chauffer -
favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
March 17, 2016
Subject: Freed got a raw deal!
Subject: Freed got a raw deal!
This is not Moondog Matinee, but is is enjoyable in spite of that fact.
There's plenty of Count Basie. If you like Basie, you'll love him on these shows! This is the Basie band, just after Joe Williams signed on as vocalist.
If you like live performances of early Rock and Roll and Rhythm and Blues, these shows have that too.
There are some acts of the day, which don't quite hold up to today's standards, and a few artists you may never have heard of, but they won't take away from your enjoyment of these programs.
You will be annoyed by the Camel Cigarette jingles (that song you might also recognize as the Civil War chestnut Goober Peas).
Man folks smoked a lot back then!
If you like vintage Country music, check out the Grand Ole Opry episodes at dnt1961's other pages https://archive.org/details/GrandOleOpryOtr and https://archive.org/details/GrandOleOpryOtr-2
There's plenty of Count Basie. If you like Basie, you'll love him on these shows! This is the Basie band, just after Joe Williams signed on as vocalist.
If you like live performances of early Rock and Roll and Rhythm and Blues, these shows have that too.
There are some acts of the day, which don't quite hold up to today's standards, and a few artists you may never have heard of, but they won't take away from your enjoyment of these programs.
You will be annoyed by the Camel Cigarette jingles (that song you might also recognize as the Civil War chestnut Goober Peas).
Man folks smoked a lot back then!
If you like vintage Country music, check out the Grand Ole Opry episodes at dnt1961's other pages https://archive.org/details/GrandOleOpryOtr and https://archive.org/details/GrandOleOpryOtr-2
Reviewer:
Alonzo Church
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
November 26, 2015
Subject: Put on Your Dancing Shoes...
Subject: Put on Your Dancing Shoes...
The trajectory of these recordings is almost the trajectory of rock and roll vis a vis the broadcast networks in 1956, the year of Elvis (who does not guest star). The first shows are very timid, and feature Count Basie's band -- a wonderful aggregation -- but very much a band for Mom and Dad, not the kids. In fact, the highlight of the first couple of months or so is Tony Bennett singing with the Count in episode 2.
But slowly, things loosen up. Count Basie is still the band, but the acts being booked have real R&B chops. The previously staid audience gets louder in their applause, and acts like Etta James start turning up. By the July recordings, Count Basie (the swingingist band in the land) is replaced by Sam the Man Taylor (still a big band, but one with an R&B sound), and folks like Chuck Berry and Bill Haley are the guest stars. And the audience is loud, raucous, and pretty clearly inspiring the musicians. By the end, you get a sense Alan Freed had won the right to book the shows and present the artists as he saw fit, and the last seven or eight shows are about as good a live aircheck as you will find.
Fidelity is exceptional -- it sounds like these were recorded off the FM station. The cigarette ads, which come with jingles that embed themselves in your brain, and will stay there to annoy you forever -- are of historic interest.
But slowly, things loosen up. Count Basie is still the band, but the acts being booked have real R&B chops. The previously staid audience gets louder in their applause, and acts like Etta James start turning up. By the July recordings, Count Basie (the swingingist band in the land) is replaced by Sam the Man Taylor (still a big band, but one with an R&B sound), and folks like Chuck Berry and Bill Haley are the guest stars. And the audience is loud, raucous, and pretty clearly inspiring the musicians. By the end, you get a sense Alan Freed had won the right to book the shows and present the artists as he saw fit, and the last seven or eight shows are about as good a live aircheck as you will find.
Fidelity is exceptional -- it sounds like these were recorded off the FM station. The cigarette ads, which come with jingles that embed themselves in your brain, and will stay there to annoy you forever -- are of historic interest.
Reviewer:
Ishikawa
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
October 14, 2015
Subject: Amazing!
Subject: Amazing!
Thanks!!! Before you uploaded these the only available copies were the AFRS transcriptions which had been very crudely edited to remove all mentions of Camel and so they ran 5 minutes short. These ones appear to be the CBS transcriptions and they're complete with nothing cut out!
The undated rehearsal is a rehearsal for the April 21 show. I assume the rehearsal would have been on the same day.
The July 7 episode should be dated July 10. In the June 30 show Freed says "We've got a new time... starting Tuesday night July 10th." I also confirmed the date by looking at the NY Times & Washington Post listings.
While I was looking I also has a look to see why there was no show on Aug 21 - it was pre-empted by the Republican National Convention.
The series started March 24 (that episode exists as #1 of the edited versions), and after the episodes on this page the series carried on for 2 more weeks (Sept 18 & 25) and was then replaced in the schedules by Suspense.
The undated rehearsal is a rehearsal for the April 21 show. I assume the rehearsal would have been on the same day.
The July 7 episode should be dated July 10. In the June 30 show Freed says "We've got a new time... starting Tuesday night July 10th." I also confirmed the date by looking at the NY Times & Washington Post listings.
While I was looking I also has a look to see why there was no show on Aug 21 - it was pre-empted by the Republican National Convention.
The series started March 24 (that episode exists as #1 of the edited versions), and after the episodes on this page the series carried on for 2 more weeks (Sept 18 & 25) and was then replaced in the schedules by Suspense.
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